Gov. Bill Ritter has announced the kickoff of a statewide energy efficiency and conservation campaign called “The New Energy Economy: Bringing It Home,” which will feature television and radio advertisements to educate homeowners, individuals and consumers about low-cost and simple steps to save energy.
Gov. Ritter said the 12-month campaign will provide basic advice and tips on how to save money at home and at work:
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Colorado's New Energy Efficiency Plan



Posted by
Boop
at
10:18 AM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Monday, June 23, 2008
Clinton Urges Energy Efficiency
Former President Clinton said Sunday that he favored presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama's position on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, though he noted that John McCain's stand on those cuts improved on Republicans in the past.
Obama has supported cutting carbon dioxide emissions by 80 percent by 2050, a position the Illinois senator shared with Clinton's wife when she was running for president.
McCain, the likely GOP presidential nominee, has announced a less ambitious plan to cut those emissions 60 percent by 2050.



Posted by
Boop
at
9:40 AM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency'
Friday, June 20, 2008
Conserving Energy and Lowering Energy Bills
This week, the president called for Congress to make policy changes that could open up offshore U.S. coastal areas for oil exploration. The plan, which would end the federal ban on offshore oil drilling on the Pacific and Atlantic coasts and some parts of the eastern Gulf of Mexico and also allow individual states more control over nearby drilling, is supported by Republican presidential candidate John McCain.
In several speeches this week, McCain discussed his potential energy policy, which calls for increased energy production, including more nuclear plants. But whatever happened to energy conservation?



Posted by
Boop
at
5:25 PM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Who Pays For Energy Efficiency?
New York electric bills will be slightly higher starting in November.
Utility regulators on Wednesday started a new program aimed at reducing energy consumption in the state and ordered power companies to collect the money to pay for it from their customers.
Some of the ideas the Public Service Commission is looking at include financial incentives to builders to adhere to higher energy efficiency standards and incentives to retailers for selling energy-efficient compact fluorescent light bulbs.
Electric bills on average will go up between 16 cents and 30 cents a month as the utilities raise $172 million to pay for the state-mandated efficiency programs.



Posted by
Boop
at
10:49 AM
1 comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Model Data Center Delivers It All
Nicholas & Company is building a model data center that delivers significantly more computing power per watt. The Salt Lake City-based, 500 employee, food distributor has increased its computing capabilities while holding energy costs level by virtualizing applications, and consolidating its servers and storage on IBM systems.
With help from IBM (NYSE: IBM) and IBM Premier Business Partner Vision Solutions, Nicholas & Company has also added new capabilities and improved the availability of its information technology infrastructure, and helped protect vital company assets by installing a world-class backup and recovery system.
Nicholas & Company, which delivers food and other products to customers ranging from the smallest restaurants to the largest national fast-food chains throughout the western United States, operates a 24X7, 215,000 square foot facility and moves up to 600,000 cases of food every week.
The company chose the IBM BladeCenter® H platform as an integral part of its business, consolidating 12 separate servers on to the platform. IBM BladeCenter H is an integrated solution designed for consolidation, virtualization and top performance. To realize further efficiencies, Nicholas & Company is running virtualization technology from VMware on IBM HS21 blade servers in the BladeCenter H.



Posted by
Boop
at
10:47 AM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Monday, June 16, 2008
Intel's New Energy Efficiency Plan
At its annual "Research Day" last week, Intel revealed several technologies focused on energy efficiency, including four breakthroughs slotted for release throughout 2009—platform power management, energy-efficient wireless, 32 nanometer (nm) chips and power clamping for data centers.
The company's 32nm chip is likely to be the first of its kind on the market and will result in an average 30 to 40 percent increase in efficiency according to the company. Smaller in size, but packed with 2 billion transistors, the chips will also drive costs down and performance up, despite requiring a more expensive immersion lithography technique for production, according to Dr. Sanjay Natarajan, director of 32nm process technology at Intel.



Posted by
Boop
at
10:42 AM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Verizon Establishes Energy Efficiency Standards
To reduce its power consumption and energy costs and shrink its carbon footprint, Verizon has established its own energy-consumption standards and an associated measurement process for new telecommunications-related equipment.
The standards will be applied to certain broadband, video, data-center, network and customer-premises equipment purchased after Jan. 1, 2009. The target provided to the manufacturers of such equipment is 20 percent greater efficiency than today's gear.



Posted by
Boop
at
2:52 PM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Sun Microsystems To Launch Energy Efficient Flash SSD
Sun Microsystems Inc. announced plans to introduce new Sun solid state disks or SSD to the market providing greater application performance, massive scale and value through the integration of the Solaris operating system, Solaris ZFS and other open source technologies.
Sun Microsystems indicated the Flash technology SSDs to consume around one fifth of the power of both memory DIMMs and disk drives, with no rotating media and consume very little power when not in use, more eco-friendly than alternatives.



Posted by
Boop
at
6:17 PM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Limiting Power Used By Electronics
The federal government will unveil new standards to limit the amount of power used by consumer electronics while in standby mode. The standards would limit the amount of power consumed by televisions, CD players, computers and other electronic devices.
A July 2007 news release said standby power accounts for up to 10 per cent of an average household's yearly electricity consumption. It said the estimated savings of limiting standby power consumption would be equivalent to taking a large coal-fired power generating unit off-line.



Posted by
Boop
at
7:17 PM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Monday, June 2, 2008
Energy Efficiency In Germany
Energy efficiency is becoming a major branch in the German economy. For example, energy-efficiency technology includes Light-Emitting Diodes (LED). These technologies can be used in homes and in streetlamps; they drastically reduce the amount of energy required to disseminate light, in comparison with traditional light bulbs.
Germany combines a tradition of scientific excellence, and a government establishing a favorable legal framework to encourage new investments in renewable energies and energy efficiency.



Posted by
Boop
at
10:55 AM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Friday, May 30, 2008
Government to provide help for poor as energy prices increases
The government set out on Friday extra measures to help the poor and boost energy efficiency in the face of rocketing fuel prices.
From energy suppliers sharing data to more help for home insulation and microgeneration and an information campaign the new measures are aimed at those in fuel poverty -- households where more than 10 percent of income goes on energy bills.



Posted by
Boop
at
12:06 PM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Thursday, May 29, 2008
ComEd offers Energy Efficiency Incentives
Commonwealth Edison and Ameren will announce an $84-million, three-year effort to encourage the wise use of electricity among commercial and industrial consumers of electricity in the Chicago-area, the Chicago Tribune reports.
The program includes rebates for commercial and industrial customers who install electricity-saving equipment or lighting, and is expected to help retrofit some older, less-efficient buildings.



Posted by
Boop
at
5:31 PM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
San Diego's Carbon Footprint Rating
The San Diego metropolitan area fared well in a national ranking of urban regions based on “carbon footprints” generated by their residential buildings and highway traffic. The region placed 10th behind well-known environmental leaders such as Seattle, San Francisco and Portland, Ore.
The analysis was published by the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit think tank based in Washington, D.C. The group assessed the nation's 100 largest urban areas based on their per capita carbon emissions in the two categories. It did not include emissions from commercial buildings or industry.



Posted by
Boop
at
7:49 PM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Oil Prices & Energy Efficiency
What should we do?
Countries must resist the temptation to limit the price of gas. And countries such as China, which already caps gasoline prices, should relax those controls and let prices rise. This will encourage conservation and spur the search for alternatives.
Energy efficiency is only part of the reason we're better off than in the 1970s. Our economies are more knowledge-based than industrial-based. The service sector has taken over from manufacturing as the primary economic driver.
As a result, the consumption of oil - and energy in general - is less of a burden on the economy. In the United States, for example, oil consumption sucks up 5.75 per cent of GDP, compared with 7.5 per cent in 1980.



Posted by
Boop
at
8:49 PM
0
comments
Labels: "energy conservation", "energy efficiency"